A lawsuit by the Joe Shuster estate filed against Warner Bros. and DC could be problematic for 'Superman' outside the US.
A copyright lawsuit against Warner Bros. Discovery and DC Comics could jeopardize the international release of “Superman,” in ...
Joe Shuster passed away in 1992. The suit claims that DC has been operating without a proper license to Superman in the ... the passing of both authors. Jerry Siegel passed away in 1996, making ...
Discovery for the foreign copyright of Superman. According to the lawsuit, Shuster sold the copyright with co-author Jerome Siegel for a total of $130 to DC Comics in 1938. According to the ...
The estate of Superman co-creator Joe Shuster sued DC Comics and Warner ... defend our rights,” the spokesperson said. Shuster and Jerome Siegel created Superman and sold the rights for $130 ...
The lawsuit was filed on Friday in federal court in New York City by the estate of Superman illustrator Joseph Shuster, who created the famous superhero along with writer Jerome Siegel.
The estate of one of the co-creators of “Superman” has sued ... The estate of comic artist Joseph Shuster, who created the character with writer Jerry Siegel in the 1930s, said in the lawsuit ...
The estate of Joe Shuster, who co-created Superman in the late 1930s with Jerry Siegel, is suing WBD, and by extension DC Comics, is claiming in a lawsuit filed today in Federal Court in the ...
The first trailer for Superman got plenty of people ... of the owner 25 years after their deaths. Since Shuster and his co-creator Jerry Siegel have both been dead longer than 25 years, the ...
It comes down to foreign copyrights to the original character. In 1938, Superman co-creators Shuster and Jerome Siegel signed the global right to Superman to Detective Comics, Inc. (DC Comics ...
This is merely the latest in a long list of legal battles between Siegel, Shuster, their estates, Warner Bros., and DC over the rights to Superman. In 2013, the San Francisco-based 9th U.S ...
but rather seeks just compensation for Joe Shuster’s fundamental contributions as the co-creator of Superman.” The lawsuit said Shuster and Siegel began creating Superman comic strips in 1934.